How Americans See Space Exploration 50 Years Later

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helicon United States of America
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How Americans See Space Exploration 50 Years Later

#1

Post by helicon »


Thought this was an interesting article...

https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2 ... n-landing/
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Re: How Americans See Space Exploration 50 Years Later

#2

Post by KingNothing13 »


Interesting, thanks Michael.

Without going into the details of each question, I seem to agree with the majority in most (all?) of those questions/statements.
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goldstar
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Re: How Americans See Space Exploration 50 Years Later

#3

Post by goldstar »


That article gave me some optimism and restored some faith in the people.
If we don't use space exploration to fix the ills of our planet there will no chance we can send men anywhere...
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Re: How Americans See Space Exploration 50 Years Later

#4

Post by notFritzArgelander »


goldstar wrote: Fri Jul 26, 2019 6:43 pm That article gave me some optimism and restored some faith in the people.
If we don't use space exploration to fix the ills of our planet there will no chance we can send men anywhere...
I too was pleasantly surprised ....
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Re: How Americans See Space Exploration 50 Years Later

#5

Post by Unitron48 »


Interesting article...with surprising results. While I love the thought of space exploration by humans, I agree that priorities should be on dealing with some of our problems closer to home.

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Re: How Americans See Space Exploration 50 Years Later

#6

Post by GCoyote »


Actually seems pretty reasonable.
I'd also like to see more attention paid to the solar wind and "space weather" studies. Large CMEs affect us and our machines both in space and increasingly on Earth as well.
Any metaphor will tear if stretched over too much reality.
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